Tag: Hollywood

  • HOAYS and ‘Let the weak  say I am strong’ credence

    HOAYS and ‘Let the weak say I am strong’ credence

    HOLLYWOOD may be anything ‘hype-able’ about America; it hardly pretends to be making sales where it has failed. In fact, in an organised community like America, it is difficult to doctor movie or music sales figures, where institutional frameworks, such as Billboard, provide record charts.

    There is so much deception in the Nigerian entertainment space, thriving on sentiments, unnecessary make-belief and denials occasioned by the desire to evade obligations.

    First, Half of a Yellow Sun (HOAYS) started off with the news of being Nigeria’s biggest budget film, as if budget is all that makes a good movie. I guess that the producers know better by now, with their $10million evidently going down the drains.

    The commercial ‘failure’ of this movie is what most filmmakers in Nigeria hate to hear, especially those hoping for some forms of grant or loan from  the government or private investors. They fear that should we drum aloud the ‘failure’ of a ‘promising child’ such as HOAYS, the disappointment of the movie investors, such as Aliko Dangote and Fola Adeola, might spur danger for other potential loan seekers.

    However, we owe it a duty to ourselves to tell the truth and stop this overrated glory about this film making $44,000 in the U.S. (in June) and N40million in Nigeria (within two weeks of showing in the cinemas). Let us assume that these figures get to the producers of the movie, they are still a far cry from the $10million sunk into the movie.

    I dare say that from the initial N40million made in Nigerian cinemas, the producers would be lucky to get a paltry 20 percent of that sales, considering that cinema house might have collected 50 percent, the distributors perhaps 10 percent, while state and  the Federal Government taxes get not less than 20 percent.

    Unfortunately, the film has been dropped at the Silverbird Galleria, and the major reason to drop a film in the cinema so quickly is when patronage begins to dwindle. With this development, it means that a film like Tango With Me even stayed longer in the cinemas.

    Unfortunately, the producers of this movie are still spending on this movie. And I am talking about unforeseen expenditures, which includes media advertisement condemning the piracy of the film in Nigeria. Indeed, the logic of releasing the DVD copy in the UK especially is one of the business laxities of the project.

    When you talk about people learning their lessons in a hard way, HOAYS is just the best example for the Nigerian film sector, and this may just occupy the discourse at different film fora to come.

    While it is understandable for those private sector to give loans to filmmakers if they so wish, I do not understand why the government should give tax payers money to filmmakers for commercial movies. This is the ugly side of today’s politics, which has continued to promote mediocrity and lazy attitude of the filmmakers, all in the name of subtle endorsement of political bid.

    I like the artistic courage of the film director, Biyi Bandele, as a first-timer; but even then, something is fundamentally wrong with the film’s content. Otherwise, beyond commercial exploits, we should be drumming Bandele’s feat so loud as an auteur by now. After all, we have seen first-time feature movie directors such as Jahmil X.T. Qubeka (Of Good Report) and Djo Munga (Viva Riva) making breakthroughs, even beyond the African continent.

    Facts about HOAYS are that it stems from a successful Nigerian book written by a celebrated author, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, and is the first to harness a budget of about $10Million. I am yet to hear other cheering news because, as they say, the end justifies the means.

    Seeing Yewande fight back tears at one of the screening sessions of the film in Lagos recently, I understood that beyond the risk she took as a guarantor for the project, her tears were prompted more by the uncertainty that trails an industry that has the potential of becoming a gold mine.

    These are some of the realities we must accept before running to town with a story of success for this movie. The more we accept our limitation, the better we strive to become better.

    To this end, abeg, let the weak say, I am weak!

  • NAFCA takes show to Hollywood

    NAFCA takes show to Hollywood

    •To honour Ooni of Ife, Alakija, others 

    For the first time, an Africa-centered movie award show will take place in Hollywood, California, a celebrated movie hub in the world.

    The show, Nollywood and African Film Critics’ Awards (NAFCA), according to its founder, Dr. Victor Olatoye, will hold at the legendary Saban Theater, Beverly Hills, California, USA, on Saturday September 13.

    Olatoye who described the show as a glorious dawn, said: “This year’s awards in Hollywood is the biggest to date with dignitaries from around the world gracing the historic event, including A-list Hollywood and Nollywood stars, music stars, diplomats, political figures and over 1500 movie buffs.”

    Speaking highly of the new venue, Olatoye said it will be double celebration in Hollywood, as NAFCA’s event will coincide with the 83rd anniversary of the theater.

    “Our guest will witness the honouring of noble men and women of Africa as we present them with the coveted golden NAFCA trophies. The Saban Theatre accommodates about 1900 people and we are just as excited and honoured to be part of the history of this iconic Beverly Hills landmark, as we join in the celebration of its 83rd anniversary on September 13.”

    He said the choice of the venue is a reflection of the vision of the award scheme for the African cinema. “Looking back at the maiden edition which held at a hotel ballroom in 2011, Carolina Theater in 2012, Warner Theatre in 2013, and now going into the heart of Beverly Hills; it is fair to say we are moving the African cinema forward.”

    Meanwhile, the Ooni of Ife, Oba Okunade Sijuwade has been picked as the first African king to step into the movie city, where he will be honoured with the special NAFCA Legend Award. The award, according to Olatoye, is the highest honour to be bestowed on an individual by NAFCA.

    “Ooni’s historical visit has been attracting a lot of positive interests to this year’s NAFCA Awards. Apart from an African-American cultural group that would welcome the monarch at the airport, the cast of Hollywood’s blockbuster, Coming To America, will equally be on hand to receive him. Also, television stations are booking in advance to have an audience with the highly respected monarch,” Olatoye revealed.

    Also, president of Rose of Sharon Foundation, Chief (Mrs.) Folorunsho Alakija, will be given the NAFCA Humanitarian Award.

  • ‘Why Hollywood celebrities are mad at me’

    Do you really think that?

    He would have said, “That’s it, they can all go to hell, and we’ll just pull ourselves in.” After he died, because there was nothing, I had to strike out again. A friend of mine at his funeral said, “He’s freed you.” I thought that was very interesting. And in a way he did, ’cause I had to really start again, thank god.

    You’ve had relationships since. Why did you and Orin Lehman break up?

    He cheated on me. His accountant called me. The lady he had been seeing had been making purchases using his money. The accountant thought it was me and was calling to tell me to go easy. I finished with him the very same day, which was stupid. He called me every single day for a year, but I was so hurt and so betrayed.

    Did you want to marry him?

    We didn’t want to marry. I still had six eggs left and thought, “Oh, I’ll just make an omelet.” He was a wonderful companion. He lived another three years after that. I miss someone saying, “I’m going downstairs now. Do you want a sandwich?”

    Did you reconcile before he died?

    Yes, to a point. I saw him a couple of times. When I see friends finishing a relationship I say, “Just be careful, don’t shut every door. What upsets you in July will not affect you that much in November.”

    How about dating now?

    No, the hotel is now closed completely. I look so bad in a bathing suit I kick sand in my own face. I’ve reached the point in my life where you think, “That’s it.”

    You don’t miss sex?

    You look at yourself and say, “How can you get a minus-44 dark room, pitch black and then some. Maybe if Stevie Wonder called I’d say “OK.”

    But you still get horny, right?

    Yes, but it’s not worth it. Old men have too many physical problems. And with younger men, as my mother always said, “You need to be the good-looking one.” I miss being able to say to someone after a party, “Can you believe what that person said?” But I’m not bitching. If life is 100 percent, I’ve got 90.

    Do men flirt with you?

    Yes, it’s the most disgusting thing when they say to an older woman, which I am, “How’s my gal doing?” Go fuck yourself, I’ve had more good times than you’ll ever know, so don’t you dare patronize me.

    You love your grandson Cooper very much.

    I’m crazy about him. He’s turning into good kid. He’s 13. He  broke his wristoh, it makes me crybreaking up a fight between two friends. He’s such a good guy and he’s funny, thank you God. And we can laugh almost on an adult level. And it’s all due to Melissa, who is an amazing mother.

    And you and Melissa?

    We’re very close. We have nobody else: She has me and I have her. I think it’s going to be very difficult when I die, very hard for her.

    You think about your own death?

    Constantly. In your 80s, you’d be foolish not to think about that. I am definitely going to be cremated. I’ve left money so the dogs can be taken care of. I’ve said to Melissa, “Sell anything and everything you don’t want. Don’t feel beholden to my possessions.” I feel almost hysterical on that. I don’t want them to have a sense of guilt.

    How did you cope with your sister’s [Barbara Waxler] death last year?

    There goes your link to your childhood and she was the memory bank of our family. I have no one to call up and say, “Do you remember that time Daddy punched out our neighbor?” “Do you remember the time that Mummy bought the mink coat and didn’t tell Daddy?” I am trying to be a good “mother” to her children, but they’re in their 30s. We weren’t very close, but we were sisters. We fought, we made up. I miss not having “my sister.”

    You joke about celebrities on Fashion Police, but very noticeably not your co-hosts Kelly Osbourne and Giuliana Rancic, who are always in the tabloidsKelly’s love life, Giuliana’s very thin body. Are they off-limits?

    We really like each other, and we’re very close. We close ranks. If someone isn’t nice to any of them, they’re dead in the water, fucked. Giuliana has the thinnest body, but she eats, she really eats, so what the hell are you going to yell at her about? I love Kelly, and as for her love life, I tell her to not do all this at 45, to get it out of her system now. What’s she got to lose? She’s young, successful, and pretty. This is the time to screw around.

    What about Melissa’s love life?

    I want to marry her off, so I know she’ll be taken care of. I’m worried about her.

    You mean, you dying and leaving her alone?

    Totally. Your child is never not your child. You can be 90 and your mother 120, but your mother is still worried about you. I worry about Melissa. I look at everyone who she dates and think, “That one’s not right, that one’s not right.” She’s dating a businessman in his mid-40s who wants to retire to Bali. He’s made his money. But her career (as a producer) is going so well. You look and think, “Somebody’s going to have to make a compromise here.” As long as she’s happy, I don’t care.

    What about you and retirement?

    Ha. Never. Do what? What fun is this, to wake up and say, “I don’t have a minute free today?” It’s fabulous. I had dinner last night with Barbara Walters, who’s an old friend, and looking forward to retirement. I said, “You’re crazy.” I bet Barbara, who is very driven, within two months will say, “Ooooh, I’ll do a special.” She told me, “I’m retired. I’m going to have lunch and enjoy myself, I’m going to travel.” I said, “Barbara, call me again in October.” It’s nonsense. What are you gonna do? Take your dog for a walk? You’re Barbara Walters, you don’t want to retire. You’re gonna watch one person on TV be an ass and say, “I could have done a better job.”

    What should they do with The View?

    Bring back Elisabeth, Joy, Barbara, Whoopi, and Sherri. Don’t fix what ain’t broke. I think they’ve blown it out of the water. It was perfect the way it was. Elisabeth represented America and conservatism. Joy was great with her funny remarks. Barbara gave it gravitas. She’d be a fool to go back unless ABC gave her a ton more money and a slice of the network.

    You don’t seem to slow down?

    It’s so exciting now. On In Bed With Joan I can say anything, there’s Twitter and Vine. This is what it was like when we went from radio to television. I feel we’re absolutely in the Wild West. It’s great.

    Which actress gives you the most material?

    Oh well, Gwyneth Paltrow, my little Gwennie-Wennie, and her two children, what is it…Apple and Sardine? Everything she says is wrong, and the arrogance… The Kardashians are the gift that keeps on giving. Just Kim’s wedding… I said I’d caught Kim’s bouquet, the first thing I ever caught from Kim that I didn’t have to get a shot of penicillin for. And Beyonce and Solange. Solaaannnggge. And Shia LaBeouf. I want to introduce him to Amanda Bynes…they’d get married but couldn’t hold hands during the vows because [Rivers is cackling] of the restraints in their jackets.

    You make a lot of jokes about the alleged sexuality of Tom Cruise and John Travolta.

    Tom Cruise’s tombstone is going to say, “Here lies Tom Cruiseallegedly.”

    Why are A-list stars still closeted?

    I think Ricky Martin did it right: Make your money and say, “Guess what, this is my partner.”

    But that shows the intolerance of Hollywood that you can’t be out as a star in your prime, rather than later.

    I know, but do you sacrifice your life for others?

    Well, very brave people who have fought for gay rights have sacrificed their lives for others.

    Good for them, I don’t know if I’d have gone that step if I were gay. If I were an actress and young teens loved me, would I have come out and said, “I hate young boys.” I don’t know. I work very hard for gay, lesbian, and transgender teens who’ve been kicked out of home. I get both sides. It’s very difficult.

    [Rivers sees I haven’t eaten a caviar-splodged canapé.]

    Eat the caviar, eat the caviar. Kenneth Battelle, one of my great hairdressers…he did Jackie [Kennedy], Barbra Streisand’s, and Gloria Vanderbilt’s hair in the ’50s and ’60s. Ladies would send him caviar and he hated caviar. He would call me up and say, “Jackie just sent me big thing of Petrossian. Ugh.”

    What do you want to do that you haven’t yet?

    Everything. I want to bring back [her 1994 Broadway show about Lenny Bruce’s mother] Sally Marr… and Her Escorts. I was nominated for a Tony for it, but lost out to Diana Rigg, that slut-whore-tramp who happened to do Medea, and I had no children to set on fire. Everyone kept telling me they’d voted for me. I really thought I was going to win. Bill Blass made a dress for me. But I say the same to everyone else now. Nobody’s going to vote for me now, I’m never going to win anything. I’m too abrasive. I’ve not been invited to the Vanity Fair [Oscars night] party. The woman who cleans my toilets gets invited to the Vanity Fair party. It’s hilarious. But I think comics should be on the outside. If you’re on the inside, it’s over.

    You’ve been rude about so many people.

    No. I told the truth. I don’t think it’s rude. I haven’t been invited to the White House since the Reagans were there. I’ve never been on Saturday Night Live.

    Why are you still an outsider?

    I don’t know.

    How do you feel about what’s happening in late-night talk shows now?

    It’s so full. If I did a show now, it would be in the late-late-late slot, between 3 and 4 a.m. I’d call it, Nobody’s Watching At That Time, So Go Fuck Yourselves.

    Why aren’t there women in the top hosting jobs?

    You need a strong personality to do that job. It’s not to do with male or female, but you’ve got to be tough yet soft, familiar yet in control. I also found it incredibly boring after a while. You have to ask the same questions of the same starlets all the time. “Did you have fun on set?” “What’s it like working in Rome?” [Rivers makes a snoring sound.]

    You need to go, I know. What advice have you given Cooper about girls?

    Don’t trust them. They’re very needy. Smack her below the collarbone, it won’t show up in court.

    [horrified]: Joan, that’s… [Rivers laughs.]

    What does Cooper say when you say stuff like that?

    He knows my sarcasm. He just laughs. “My grandmother’s crazy.”

  • JOAN RIVERS: ‘Why Hollywood celebrities are mad at me’

    JOAN RIVERS: ‘Why Hollywood celebrities are mad at me’

    Comedienne, Joan Rivers, is a Hollywood legend. The hostess of E!’s Fashion Police in this typically candid interview talks about Hollywood celebrities’ thin skins, contemplating suicide after her husband’s suicide, sex, dating, mortality, and why Twitter and Vines are ‘fabulous.’ She spoke with Tim Teeman.

    The Russian Tea Room in New York City, a cocoon of plushly-furnished, shamelessly old-school luxury with red booths, Joan Rivers is directing the Entertainment Tonight crew following her for the day, as she takes her seat in our booth. “That’s not going to work, that lighting. I can tell you it’s wrong.”

    She should know. As Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work, the brilliant, genuinely candid 2010 documentary about her life made clear, Rivers works relentlessly because she is terrified about what not working means: not being relevant, or in the mix. She doesn’t crave fame, she craves attention and recognition, and staying in the game, having a voice.

    Forget retirement. Luckily for us, and unluckily for Hollywood’s most vain and self-involved, Rivers, 81, is an old-school trouper, fully immersed in pop culture for her comedy routine. She makes jokes about the Kardashians and Kristen Stewart on the brilliant E! Friday night fixture, Fashion Police, and on stages across America. She does the reality show Joan & Melissa: Joan Knows Best?, which follows, in highly scripted and contrived form, Rivers, her TV producer daughter, and Cooper, her 13-year-old grandson. There are web series like In Bed With Joan and the newly minted Drunken Celebrity Phone Calls.

    She was a regular comedian on Johnny Carson’s Tonight Show; later she had her own talk show. She remains the dirtiest, rudest deflater of celebrity egos and vanity in Hollywood. Joking about the plastic surgery she’s had, she once told me she had bumped into the cast of Desperate Housewives and Sex and the City in the waiting room of Pat Wexler, “the best doctor in New York,” who collectively couldn’t blow out the candles of Wexler’s birthday cake, their faces were so frozen with Botox and fillers.

    Rivers’s latest book, Diary of a Mad Diva, is plainly not a diary of 2013 in any way at all (it totally leaves out her sister’s death, for example); a note at the beginning says, “Miss Rivers wrote this diary as a comedic tome, not unlike Saving Private Ryan or The Bell Jar…Anyone who takes anything seriously in this book is an idiot.”

    What it is a gleeful, messy barbecue of famous names, beginning with a quote by Kanye West proudly proclaiming to be a non-reader of books, to which Rivers’ dedication on the next page reads in response: “This book be dedicated to Kanye West, because he’ll never fuckin’ read it.” There follows almost 300 pages of jokes at celebrities’ expense. One, Kristen Stewart, has already threatened legal action, after Rivers wrote: “Many stars only do one thing well. The best one-trick-pony is Kristen Stewart, who got a whole career by being able to juggle a director’s balls.”

    The glorious Rivers, originally bought up in Brooklyn, marches on. She has been through much worse, most notably the suicide of her husband, Edgar, in 1987, after her talk show was canceled, a dark period which also led her to contemplate taking her own life. She lives in a grand, mini-Versailles of an apartment on the Upper East Side, and in Los Angeles.

    The waiter places two crisp glasses of Chardonnay in front of us.

    Joan Rivers: Oh, thank god, it’s been a long day. Go, go, go, anything you want to ask me, ask me. [To the waiter] I’m begging you: Please bring us some finger food.

    The rest of the conversation:

    Is Kristen Stewart suing you?

    I don’t think she’s suing me, I think she stopped it. Her lawyer called my lawyer and wanted the book to be taken from bookstores or a public apology and my lawyerI love him so muchsaid, “Have you read the book, have you seen the disclaimer?” It’s a comedy book. I find it astonishing that people can read something and say, “Will the Kardashians really name their second baby, ’cause the first one is called North West, South East?”

    So, Stewart’s legal threat surprised you?

    I didn’t know who she was. She should have a sense of humor. It’s a shame as I wanted her in court and made to touch a doll in the parts where the director touched her.

    Who else have you upset with the book?

    Adele is I hear very upset, the Kardashians are very upset. The ones who aren’t upset are the smart ones who laugh at it and know it’s silly.

    Do celebrities approach you to tell you you’ve upset them?

    I made so many jokes about poor Russell Crowe, he once knocked on my dressing room door, and told me he wanted to go out on this chat show we were on to laugh with me. Now he’s ruined it. I can’t make another joke about him. Cher would get upset if I took her out of the act. She would come to see me in Vegas, and ask, “Why am I not in the act?” She understood that you’re only in the act if you’re relevant. I see the Kardashians at E! I always say, “Stay famous, or I’m going to lose seven to ten minutes of my act.”

    Do you know them well?

    I think the mother [Kris] is the smartest woman in world: She took the entire family, and now the next generation, and made them celebrities for doing nothing. I think that’s brilliant. I want to sit at her feet and take notes. I begged Melissa to do a sex tape. I said, “I’ll even hold the lube.” Melissa is such a princess. She said, “What will the thread count of the sheets be?”

    You mocked one up yourself with Ray J.

    Before I met him I thought he was a sleazeball, but Ray J turned out to be adorable. He was articulate, charming, full of a sense of humor.

    Why are Hollywood stars so sensitive?

    I love when they say I’ve crossed a line. On the scale of 1 to Osama bin Laden, I didn’t blow up buildings. I made a joke about Sharon Stone. I think sometimes celebrities believe their own publicitythat they really were a pizza waitress rather then being “discovered” on their knees in front of some producer. No one says no to them because they’re so spoilt. We have people on Fashion Police who come with lists of demands longer than Schindler’s List. I can’t say who.

    Do you expect cosseting yourself?

    I think “my people,” as they say, in quotes, try to shield me but I want to know. Comedians are in the trenches, the ones that get out of the trenches are ones in trouble. You cannot have dinner with Oprah and then do a joke about her and Gayle, so you’d better choose what side you’re on. I have no cosseting and protection, nor am I invited to the same parties. I’m always shocked when I get an invitation. People are always shocked when they see me at a party.

    So, regardless of your own riches…

    I have no riches.

    Come on, Joan, you are quite well off.

    No, I’ve always been salaried, I’ve never owned anything. I’ve done very well, lived very well. Sweetheart, I’m still working at Indian casinos in Omaha.

    You seem terrified of not working.

    With comedians, you’re as good as your last joke.

    Where does the fear come from?

    It being over, and I can’t get a job in Macy’s selling hats.

    You could live off your money?

    I don’t have money to do that. I could pull my living in and live OK, but I don’t want to live OK. I’m very happy to live in my penthouse, very happy I can pick up a check, very happy to have a great life, and be able to spread my wealth a little bit.

    You like pop culture?

    I love Vines. You make this 6.4-second drama, and you can reach 6 million viewers, and make people laugh. I find it so fabulous.

    Does being famous and being talked about matter to you?

    Yeah, it gives you friends. It’s good to have people all day long saying, “You make me happy, you make me laugh.” Fame is so wonderful. When my husband committed suicide, I was in Chicago. In the middle of the night at an airport someone told me they had lit a candle for me. How wonderful is that? Fame makes the whole world your neighbor. Fame gives you a great card to live your life and make it easier. Nancy Reagan [Rivers’ longtime friend] got Edgar’s body out of Philadelphia for me.

    Whaaat? How?

    Edgar killed himself in Philadelphia and I couldn’t get the body out of there. My daughter was going mad. I thought, “I’ll call the White House.” It was 2 a.m. there. I said, “It’s Joan Rivers and it’s an emergency. I must speak to Mrs. Reagan.” They woke her up.

    Seriously?

    You don’t forget this, honey-bunny. I said, “I can’t get Edgar’s body out of Philadelphia.” She said, “Let me see what I can do.” The next day, his body came back to L.A. You don’t ever forget that, especially when the chips are down. She’s older now. I’m going to California next week, and I’ll see her.

    You told me once you were furious with Edgar for killing himself. Does one ever recover from a partner or loved one’s suicide?

    I moved on to a point. I can’t really remember what Edgar was like. I lived with [banker and socialite] Orin Lehman for eight years, and can’t remember what he was like. You remember them but they all become fuzzy and wonderful. You no longer miss their sharp wit, you miss an idea. It changes tremendously and probably for the better.

    After Edgar died, you considered suicide yourself.

    Oh, absolutely. It was about eight months later. Melissa wasn’t talking to me, my career was in the toilet, I’d lost my Vegas contracts, I’d been fired from Fox [where she had a talk show]. Carson and NBC [she had appeared on the Tonight Show for years] had put out such bad publicity about me. I was a pariah. I wasn’t invited anywhere. I was a non-person. At one point I thought, “What’s the point? This is stupid.”

    What saved me was my dog jumped into my lap. I thought, “No one will take care of him.” It wasn’t a friendly dogonly to me. I adored this dog. He was theoretically a Yorkie, his mother cheated. His name was Spike. He was the way you want your dog to be, devoted only to you. I was sitting in this big empty house in Bel Air, with a phone with five extensions which we no longer needed. I had the gun in my lap, and the dog sat on the gun. I lecture on suicide because things turn around. I tell people this is a horrible, awful dark moment, but it will change and you must know it’s going to change and you push forward. I look back and think, “Life is great, life goes on. It changes.”

    Do you ever think why Edgar did it [he overdosed on prescription drugs]?

    When I was fired, he knew it was his fault [he was her manager], and he committed suicide. I always think of Samson pulling down the temple. Edgar just took all the columns away and pulled it down. We were all down in the rubble, and he didn’t want to dig himself out. I understand it, and feel terribly sorry for him, but I wonder if I’d be sitting here today talking to you if he had not killed himself, if we wouldn’t have ended up just a very bitter couple in a house on the hill somewhere.

    Do you really think that?

    He would have said, “That’s it, they can all go to hell, and we’ll just pull ourselves in.” After he died, because there was nothing, I had to strike out again. A friend of mine at his funeral said, “He’s freed you.” I thought that was very interesting. And in a way he did, ’cause I had to really start again, thank god.

    You’ve had relationships since. Why did you and Orin Lehman break up?

    He cheated on me. His accountant called me. The lady he had been seeing had been making purchases using his money. The accountant thought it was me and was calling to tell me to go easy. I finished with him the very same day, which was stupid. He called me every single day for a year, but I was so hurt and so betrayed.

    Did you want to marry him?

    We didn’t want to marry. I still had six eggs left and thought, “Oh, I’ll just make an omelet.” He was a wonderful companion. He lived another three years after that. I miss someone saying, “I’m going downstairs now. Do you want a sandwich?”

    Did you reconcile before he died?

    Yes, to a point. I saw him a couple of times. When I see friends finishing a relationship I say, “Just be careful, don’t shut every door. What upsets you in July will not affect you that much in November.”

    How about dating now?

    No, the hotel is now closed completely. I look so bad in a bathing suit I kick sand in my own face. I’ve reached the point in my life where you think, “That’s it.”

    You don’t miss sex?

    You look at yourself and say, “How can you get a minus-44 dark room, pitch black and then some. Maybe if Stevie Wonder called I’d say “OK.”

    But you still get horny, right?

    Yes, but it’s not worth it. Old men have too many physical problems. And with younger men, as my mother always said, “You need to be the good-looking one.” I miss being able to say to someone after a party, “Can you believe what that person said?” But I’m not bitching. If life is 100 percent, I’ve got 90.

    Do men flirt with you?

    Yes, it’s the most disgusting thing when they say to an older woman, which I am, “How’s my gal doing?” Go fuck yourself, I’ve had more good times than you’ll ever know, so don’t you dare patronize me.

    You love your grandson Cooper very much.

    I’m crazy about him. He’s turning into good kid. He’s 13. He  broke his wristoh, it makes me crybreaking up a fight between two friends. He’s such a good guy and he’s funny, thank you God. And we can laugh almost on an adult level. And it’s all due to Melissa, who is an amazing mother.

    And you and Melissa?

    We’re very close. We have nobody else: She has me and I have her. I think it’s going to be very difficult when I die, very hard for her.

    You think about your own death?

    Constantly. In your 80s, you’d be foolish not to think about that. I am definitely going to be cremated. I’ve left money so the dogs can be taken care of. I’ve said to Melissa, “Sell anything and everything you don’t want. Don’t feel beholden to my possessions.” I feel almost hysterical on that. I don’t want them to have a sense of guilt.

    How did you cope with your sister’s [Barbara Waxler] death last year?

    There goes your link to your childhood and she was the memory bank of our family. I have no one to call up and say, “Do you remember that time Daddy punched out our neighbor?” “Do you remember the time that Mummy bought the mink coat and didn’t tell Daddy?” I am trying to be a good “mother” to her children, but they’re in their 30s. We weren’t very close, but we were sisters. We fought, we made up. I miss not having “my sister.”

    You joke about celebrities on Fashion Police, but very noticeably not your co-hosts Kelly Osbourne and Giuliana Rancic, who are always in the tabloidsKelly’s love life, Giuliana’s very thin body. Are they off-limits?

    We really like each other, and we’re very close. We close ranks. If someone isn’t nice to any of them, they’re dead in the water, fucked. Giuliana has the thinnest body, but she eats, she really eats, so what the hell are you going to yell at her about? I love Kelly, and as for her love life, I tell her to not do all this at 45, to get it out of her system now. What’s she got to lose? She’s young, successful, and pretty. This is the time to screw around.

    What about Melissa’s love life?

    I want to marry her off, so I know she’ll be taken care of. I’m worried about her.

    You mean, you dying and leaving her alone?

    Totally. Your child is never not your child. You can be 90 and your mother 120, but your mother is still worried about you. I worry about Melissa. I look at everyone who she dates and think, “That one’s not right, that one’s not right.” She’s dating a businessman in his mid-40s who wants to retire to Bali. He’s made his money. But her career (as a producer) is going so well. You look and think, “Somebody’s going to have to make a compromise here.” As long as she’s happy, I don’t care.

    What about you and retirement?

    Ha. Never. Do what? What fun is this, to wake up and say, “I don’t have a minute free today?” It’s fabulous. I had dinner last night with Barbara Walters, who’s an old friend, and looking forward to retirement. I said, “You’re crazy.” I bet Barbara, who is very driven, within two months will say, “Ooooh, I’ll do a special.” She told me, “I’m retired. I’m going to have lunch and enjoy myself, I’m going to travel.” I said, “Barbara, call me again in October.” It’s nonsense. What are you gonna do? Take your dog for a walk? You’re Barbara Walters, you don’t want to retire. You’re gonna watch one person on TV be an ass and say, “I could have done a better job.”

    What should they do with The View?

    Bring back Elisabeth, Joy, Barbara, Whoopi, and Sherri. Don’t fix what ain’t broke. I think they’ve blown it out of the water. It was perfect the way it was. Elisabeth represented America and conservatism. Joy was great with her funny remarks. Barbara gave it gravitas. She’d be a fool to go back unless ABC gave her a ton more money and a slice of the network.

    You don’t seem to slow down?

    It’s so exciting now. On In Bed With Joan I can say anything, there’s Twitter and Vine. This is what it was like when we went from radio to television. I feel we’re absolutely in the Wild West. It’s great.

    Which actress gives you the most material?

    Oh well, Gwyneth Paltrow, my little Gwennie-Wennie, and her two children, what is it…Apple and Sardine? Everything she says is wrong, and the arrogance… The Kardashians are the gift that keeps on giving. Just Kim’s wedding… I said I’d caught Kim’s bouquet, the first thing I ever caught from Kim that I didn’t have to get a shot of penicillin for. And Beyonce and Solange. Solaaannnggge. And Shia LaBeouf. I want to introduce him to Amanda Bynes…they’d get married but couldn’t hold hands during the vows because [Rivers is cackling] of the restraints in their jackets.

    You make a lot of jokes about the alleged sexuality of Tom Cruise and John Travolta.

    Tom Cruise’s tombstone is going to say, “Here lies Tom Cruiseallegedly.”

    Why are A-list stars still closeted?

    I think Ricky Martin did it right: Make your money and say, “Guess what, this is my partner.”

    But that shows the intolerance of Hollywood that you can’t be out as a star in your prime, rather than later.

    I know, but do you sacrifice your life for others?

    Well, very brave people who have fought for gay rights have sacrificed their lives for others.

    Good for them, I don’t know if I’d have gone that step if I were gay. If I were an actress and young teens loved me, would I have come out and said, “I hate young boys.” I don’t know. I work very hard for gay, lesbian, and transgender teens who’ve been kicked out of home. I get both sides. It’s very difficult.

    [Rivers sees I haven’t eaten a caviar-splodged canapé.]

    Eat the caviar, eat the caviar. Kenneth Battelle, one of my great hairdressers…he did Jackie [Kennedy], Barbra Streisand’s, and Gloria Vanderbilt’s hair in the ’50s and ’60s. Ladies would send him caviar and he hated caviar. He would call me up and say, “Jackie just sent me big thing of Petrossian. Ugh.”

    What do you want to do that you haven’t yet?

    Everything. I want to bring back [her 1994 Broadway show about Lenny Bruce’s mother] Sally Marr… and Her Escorts. I was nominated for a Tony for it, but lost out to Diana Rigg, that slut-whore-tramp who happened to do Medea, and I had no children to set on fire. Everyone kept telling me they’d voted for me. I really thought I was going to win. Bill Blass made a dress for me. But I say the same to everyone else now. Nobody’s going to vote for me now, I’m never going to win anything. I’m too abrasive. I’ve not been invited to the Vanity Fair [Oscars night] party. The woman who cleans my toilets gets invited to the Vanity Fair party. It’s hilarious. But I think comics should be on the outside. If you’re on the inside, it’s over.

    You’ve been rude about so many people.

    No. I told the truth. I don’t think it’s rude. I haven’t been invited to the White House since the Reagans were there. I’ve never been on Saturday Night Live.

    Why are you still an outsider?

    I don’t know.

    How do you feel about what’s happening in late-night talk shows now?

    It’s so full. If I did a show now, it would be in the late-late-late slot, between 3 and 4 a.m. I’d call it, Nobody’s Watching At That Time, So Go Fuck Yourselves.

    Why aren’t there women in the top hosting jobs?

    You need a strong personality to do that job. It’s not to do with male or female, but you’ve got to be tough yet soft, familiar yet in control. I also found it incredibly boring after a while. You have to ask the same questions of the same starlets all the time. “Did you have fun on set?” “What’s it like working in Rome?” [Rivers makes a snoring sound.]

    You need to go, I know. What advice have you given Cooper about girls?

    Don’t trust them. They’re very needy. Smack her below the collarbone, it won’t show up in court.

    [horrified]: Joan, that’s… [Rivers laughs.]

    What does Cooper say when you say stuff like that?

    He knows my sarcasm. He just laughs. “My grandmother’s crazy.”

  • Angelina Jolie condemns   Chibok kidnapping

    Angelina Jolie condemns Chibok kidnapping

    HOLLYWOOD actress, Angelina Jolie, has described the kidnapping of over 200 school girls in Nigeria by Boko Haram insurgents as “unthinkable cruelty.”

    The popular star spoke on Tuesday in Paris about the themes of her latest film, Maleficent, in which she plays a vindictive fairy driven to curse an infant princess.

    “Sadly, of course, there is real evil in the world. You watch the news and you see all of the people suffering and so much cruelty. And it’s unthinkable cruelty like these girls that were kidnapped in Nigeria. Unthinkable cruelty and evil,” she said at a press conference. A total of 276 students were kidnapped in Nigeria’s northeastern Borno State three weeks ago when Boko Haram stormed their school loaded them onto trucks. Several managed to escape, but over 220 girls are still being held, according to security agents.

    In a video message obtained by AFP on Monday, Abubakar Shekau, the head of the Islamist group, Boko Haram, confessed to holding the girls and threatened to sell them. Other foreign artistes who have joined the Bring Back Our Girls campaign include Justin Timberlake, Mary J Blige, Keri Hilson and Chris Brown.

  • I might  remarry if…– Nollywood actress Doris Simeon

    I might remarry if…– Nollywood actress Doris Simeon

    Doris Simeon, one of the crossover actresses in Nollywood, has featured in a number of award-winning flicks since she came into the industry some years ago. However, since her marriage to Daniel Ademinokan, a movie director, broke up in 2012, the fair-complexioned actress has had to deal with a lot of issues. In this no-holds-barred interview with MERCY MICHAEL and DUPE AYINLA-OLASUNKANMI, the mother of one, who is presently in South Africa for a TV series, talks about her crashed marriage and future plans, among others.

    YOU look good as always, so what is your beauty regimen like?

    Sincerely, I don’t use creams as such because of the harsh weather. When you are under the sun, you sweat a lot and when the sweat gets to a particular point, it creates a burn. So, it is better you don’t even use cream in the morning or afternoon. It’s always just good to do that at night because the weather is cool and you are indoors.

    I understand you will be going to South Africa for a TV series soon. Could you tell us the secret behind this?

    I would say it’s not by my doing. It’s just the grace of God. For someone to insist that it’s Doris Simeon that must be used for this particular project, it can only be God. It’s a new TV series, just like Jacobs Cross. It’s a lovely story. These guys called me early last year to tell me about the project they were working on and they promised to get back to me.

    But from that time till last year, I didn’t hear anything from them. At a point, I thought they had gotten someone else. This is one thing I tell people; if it’s your job, they will definitely find you. By the grace of God, this year, I got a call from them. When I even got the call, I thought they were joking until they asked for my passport. They first asked me if I still have my South Africa visa and I said it had expired. Then, they asked me to send my passport to them. So, they processed it and eventually sent it back to me.

    Why did you think you were chosen for the role?

    It’s God’s grace o! Some people are better than Doris Simeon, but it’s just what God has ordained. I just thank God, so I would rather not boast that it is by my doing.

    Have you seen the script? If yes, what is really fascinating about it?

    I’ve seen the script and the story line is fantastic. I couldn’t drop the script until I finished reading it. When I finished reading it yesterday, I told my younger ones that by the time they shoot this movie, it should just blow out to Hollywood, not even our Idumota here (laughs). Hopefully, that’s where it’s going to.

    What role are you playing in the series?

    It’s a story about a family, where the children are raised in a spoilt way. The children grow up to spend lavishly and then one of them gets married. The person he gets married to is the character I’m playing. In-between the story, they all have secrets that they are now revealing. Meanwhile, there is someone in that family who wants to revenge and that is the character I am playing. I have to revenge because of what their father has done to my own family.

    Could you recall ever revenging in real life?

    No. I wasn’t brought up that way and one thing I always tell my younger ones is that God, who created us, forgives our sins every blessed day; so, why won’t we forgive one another. What is the worst thing that somebody can do to you? Maybe someone will kill your child, brother, mother or someone very close to you. If you then revenge by killing that person, will that make you feel fulfilled? I would rather leave the fight for God. It might hurt and, therefore, hard to forget and forgive, but you have to find a way to forget it and move on. This is because if you don’t forget and forgive, you won’t move forward in life. I would rather forget and focus on my future.

    Could it be why you seem to have achieved more lately?

    I think so. Therefore, rather than dwell on the past, I will think about how I can better my life. I will rather think of how I am going to be successful. Instead of thinking of how I am going to revenge and spend my money trying to revenge, I will rather leave it for God. By spending money to revenge, you might become broke in the process. Before you know it, you start to go hungry or your landlord will start to knock on your door and disgrace you because you are a star.

    So, I will rather go out there, make money and even pay before my rent is due. My landlord and I are the best of friends because I pay my rent promptly. Any little thing I complain about, he takes it seriously. I am too preoccupied with a lot of positive thoughts so much that I don’t have time to dwell on negativity. And one of things that give me fulfillment is helping people. I derive pleasure in helping the less privileged.

    Do you have your own foundation now?

    I don’t have a foundation and I really don’t think I want to have one for now probably because a lot of people have abused it. I will rather support any other person that has. I have a strong passion for those who do not have because I know where I am coming from. I know what I went through to get to where I am today.

    When was the last time you were on location?

    It was in November for Iyabo Ojo’s latest flick, Silence.

    Could you tell us about it?

    It was very interesting probably because I like to play a lot. It is always fun for me whenever I am working. But if the job is taking a longer time than necessary, then, I will be thinking of my business. It’s a lovely film. I worked for the first time with Joseph Benjamin, Alex Osifo and some other stars. We chatted like we’ve been working together for a very long time. It is about domestic violence and step-parenting. I love doing movies that will educate and entertain.

    Let’s talk ‘Faaji Extra’, the Yoruba programme that you present…

    Acting in Yoruba is not the same thing as presenting in Yoruba. It was challenging because the first few episodes I shot, I had to stop the shoot to return the following day because I didn’t like what I was doing. But I was determined not to give up. And then, presenting, I think, is also part of entertainment. It was difficult for me for the first three episodes, but I just picked up afterwards. Right now, I don’t want to stop anymore. And the feedback has been good. A whole lot of people and sponsors wish to be parts of the programme.

    Who is the producer?

    The producer is Olaniyi Stevens. He is based in Ibadan and we shot in Ibadan. But I think the next season will be shot in Lagos State probably in April when I come back from South Africa. Hopefully, it’s going to be bigger and better this time around.

    Did you have to audition for it?

    No! When I was called up, I felt like of all the Yoruba actresses, omo ibo le fe (it’s an ibo girl that you want). But he said that is the whole idea, which he wants to sell: an Edo girl doing a Yoruba programme. In fact, some of the guests that came on the show were like, ‘Mehn, let’s clap for this woman’. It was fun shooting the first episode.

    You said the reason you go all out to help people is because of your experience…

    Well, I would say my growing up was fun. Sometime ago, I was coming back from the market with my younger ones and was listening to Olamide, where he sang that they usually lined up to enter the toilet and all those things. So, I tapped my brother, Victor, and said, ‘Do you remember those days when we would line up and you would be holding your bum, saying, ‘ Who dey inside toilet now.’ He was still a baby then. I thank God, at least, we had a roof over our head then, but some people didn’t even. One of my friends said recently that she was listening to a radio programme, where they said it is at night in Lagos that you will know how many people are homeless. You will see people sleeping on pavements and every other place and then you will thank God.

    What was your dream then?

    I dreamt to be as big as this, even bigger than this.

    Have you always wanted to be an actress?

    I have always wanted to be an entertainer. I loved entertainment when I was growing up. I loved TV a lot. I dreamt of becoming great in life and providing for my parents all they need. Though I have lost my parents, they enjoyed a little before they died. I thank God I grew up to know them. Some people did not even grow up to know their parents.

    Were they still married to each other until their death?

    Yes, they were still married to each other. I think it was even the love they had for each other that took the two of them because it was just a year interval.

    Did you ever imagine that you were going to be separated someday?

    No, I never thought I would be separated someday. Yes, it definitely hit me when it happened. But life goes on.

    But a lot of people had the impression that you couldn’t be bothered and that you wanted this freedom?

    No, if I wanted the freedom, I have it now; so, why am I not exploring the situation? Instead of that, I am trying to make money. I have a lot of responsibilities. So, rather than sit down and mourn all day, I have to face the reality.

    My mother was a strong woman and I learnt a lot from her. She went through a lot, which I knew of from when I was a little child. In spite of all that she went through, she kept moving on. My mom had a stroke and survived it; and she still looked radiant. My mom jumped from one trade to another. When I think of that, I would be like, this woman, na you born me, I must do that thing wey you teach us. Those are the things I just look back and then I just move on. I have a child that I need to work for, so that he won’t face the kind of suffering I faced in the future.

    Will you consider marriage again?

    I don’t know, but I am not ruling it out because I am human. I might just fall head over heels in love again. But let me still be doing what I am doing. Wherever the Lord takes me, I will go.

    What would you do differently when you find love again?

    I will probably right the wrong things I did then. I mean I will do the right thing three times over.

    What were those things?

    Can I even point them out? I can’t point them out.

    Was it that you didn’t have enough time for the family?

    It wasn’t that in anyway. It is just one of those things you have to deal with. People will say one thing or the other to defend their own sides. When I’m on set, I want to quickly do whatever I am doing. This is because I see a movie script as an examination; and when you have an examination you want to quickly do it and then relax. That is the way I work. I just want to do it and know that I am done with this script, so I can face my family. So, it’s not that I get carried away with work. I just want to do the best I can at that particular time that I am doing that job and get out from that set and face my family or face whatever I need to do next.

    At a time, you and Daniel were one of the best couples in Nollywood. What could have gone wrong?

    Anything could have gone wrong. Anything could have triggered a fire anywhere. You don’t know what might happen the next minute. We are just trying to make things go right, but God has the final say. Yes, things happen in life and till eternity you keep asking that question what went wrong. But if you dwell on that, you won’t move forward because everything that happens has God’s hands in it. There is a reason why anything happens and it has been written that it will happen that way.

    After a year, what did you do?

    Funny enough, after a year, I was like, ‘Doris, how do you think you want to move on with your life? What should you do to move on? That was when I decided not to dwell on the past; otherwise, I will go hungry. People that want to laugh at me are out there, so I will rather make them say, ‘Aha Aha, what’s happening? And I am moving ahead with my life.

    What is the relationship between the two of you now, given that you have a child for him?

    We have a child, so we talk. The boy is there, so why won’t we talk? We cannot be sworn enemies forever. Not every relationship leads to marriage, yet the people involved still talk.

    But how do you feel knowing that your colleague is supposedly married to him?

    She’s a woman and he is a man. Na man I go still follow so (laughs). In this industry, most of us are colleagues; it is not that we are close friends or something. No be say na my mama born am now.

    What about all those statements credited to you that you will deal with Stella Damasus?

    I don’t know where they got all those stuff from. As a matter of fact, The Nation is the first newspaper I’m opening up to so much on my marriage because I know that you guys are not here to get something scandalous from me. Recently, somebody used my name on BBM to get money from people. I now traced that to a Facebook account. The person’s Facebook has my name, my pictures and everything. And they were probably getting their stories and stupid talk from all the things the person was writing. In fact, the person’s fan page has more likes than my own original fan page. Can you imagine? The person has a BB with Doris Simeon and she was telling people she wants to do a movie that they should send N10,000 into a certain account.

  • BJ SAM gets  international  recognition

    BJ SAM gets international recognition

    BJ SAM, a model, writer and actor, has signed a new global distribution contract with Africori in partnership with IODA, one of the world’s largest music distribution companies based in London.

    The respected consultant and master of ceremonies was also said to have been contacted some weeks back on a recording deal with a USA record label based in Mali.

    The recent is an invitation by Warner Bros Music in London for a forthcoming musical contract.

    One of his songs, Be strong, has been selected as a soundtrack for a Hollywood movie coming out soon.

    He started music at a young age of 15 at IBC Choir, Ibadan, and later joined an accapella/hip hop group called The Simplest Guyz and a dancing group called 3 G`s.

    According to him, “I am a versatile artiste and my songs are uplifting and inspiring. My songs evoke my listeners’ hopes, feelings and aspirations, moving them to ecstasy and reducing them to tears.”

    He has performed far and wide with international and Nigerian artistes like D’banj and Tuface Idibia.

  • Hollywood actor, Seagal  to contest as governor

    Hollywood actor, Seagal to contest as governor

    As news of Nollywood actor, Desmond Elliot’s intention to contest an elective post in Lagos appears to be trending in Nigeria, Hollywood action-movie star, Steven Seagal says he is considering a run for Arizona governor.

    The Marked for Death actor said he is considering a shot at the state’s highest office and has had a talk about the bid with the self-proclaimed toughest sheriff in America.

    The 61-year-old actor mentioned his political aspirations while promoting his new reality TV show, Steven Seagal — Lawman: Maricopa County.

    Seagal teamed up with Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio for the show that was shot in Arizona and airs on cable TV’s Reelz Channel.

    Seagal who was sworn in as a local deputy sheriff last year, said that border security is the most important issue facing the country.

    The martial arts expert is a member of Arpaio’s posse, made up of 3 000 unpaid civilians. He has been deputy at sheriff’s offices in New Mexico, Texas and Louisiana.